WAUSAU — A man shot by Wausau police during a reported burglary on Aug. 22 was charged Thursday with two new crimes and was ordered held on a $10,000 cash bond.

Adam Radek, 34, was charged in Marathon County court with possession of heroin with intent to manufacture or deliver and possession of a firearm as a felon. District Attorney Ken Heimerman said last Friday that he planned to file the charges against Radek on top of his current charges. He said that during a news conference that capped a weeks-long Department of Justice investigation into Wausau Police Officer Shawn Fritsch's use of force the afternoon of Aug. 22.

Radek and two women, Sabrina Bidwell and Shelly Tomlinson, went to a home at 814 S. First Ave. that day with another woman and man so Tomlinson could retrieve money that she owed the man and so he and Tomlinson both could pick up belongings they had left at the home, according to court documents. The man at one point made stays at the home, described in court records as a drug house, but it was vacant and had no power that day, court documents said.

The man and woman eventually left Radek, Bidwell and Tomlinson alone at the home after the man was paid and after giving Radek permission to take a washer and dryer from the house, according to court documents. Radek and Tomlinson were in the basement trying to unhook the appliances when four Wausau Police officers showed up at a back door of the home, responding to a report of a burglary in progress, court documents said. Bidwell answered the door while Radek and Tomlinson hid under the basement stairs, court documents said.

Police yelled to check if anyone was in the basement and Tomlinson ran up the stairs, at first telling officers no one else was in the basement but later telling police that Radek was downstairs and had a gun, according to court documents. Radek was found crouching behind the washing machine with a .45-caliber handgun in his right hand, which he refused to drop when police told him to show his hands, court documents said.

Fritsch fired two shots at Radek when Radek began to stand and raise his hands while still holding the gun, according to court documents. Radek was hit once on the back left side of his neck, court documents said.

An officer in the basement told Radek he was shot because they heard the hammer of Radek's gun, according to court documents. Radek told investigators the gun was jammed and he pulled the slide back to try and prevent it from going off, court documents said, but Crime Lab test results proved the gun was fully functional, loaded and ready to fire. Radek said he was never told to drop his gun or he would have, according to court documents.

Radek had about 2.1 grams of heroin when he was shot and admitted to using heroin about an hour before the shooting, court documents said.

Thursday's charges are being added to an open case filed Sept. 2, in which Radek faces charges of manufacture or delivery of heroin and maintenance of a drug trafficking place. The charges stem from a previous drug incident and had not been filed at the time of the shooting, Assistant District Attorney Kyle Mayo said Thursday. Radek was jailed on a probation hold after his release from Aspirus Wausau Hospital, according to court documents.

Fritsch returned to active duty Monday after he was put on administrative leave during the investigation, Wausau Police Chief Jeff Hardel said.

Heimerman said he reviewed more than 100 reports and squad car videos from the night of the shooting and consulted a firearms instructor from Oshkosh Police Department before deciding on charges. Heimerman said Tomlinson, Bidwell and the man who dialed 911 will be charged with obstructing police. Reports are still coming in from the DOJ but Heimerman doesn't expect any more charges in the case, he said.